Security product provider Rapid7 has updated its widely used open source Metasploit exploitation framework, expanding the software so it supports enterprise IT security staff as well as its core audience of penetration testers.

By
Joab Jackson
| Aug 04, 2011

| IDG News Service

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Security product provider Rapid7 has updated its widely used open source Metasploit exploitation framework, expanding the software so it supports enterprise IT security staff as well as its core audience of penetration testers.

"Originally the framework was focused on just running exploits. Penetration testers were our core base," said Rapid7 Metasploit chief architect HD Moore, referring to the security professionals who are paid by organisations to break into, and thereby document the weaknesses of, computer systems. "But now we are seeing a huge demand from organisations that just want to put all their existing vulnerability data in one spot and validate all those vulnerabilities."

Moore noted that penetration testers, or pentesters in the parlance of the security field, generally will only have to test a handful of systems in the course of their engagements, whereas an enterprise IT security staff may want to test thousands or even tens of thousands of computers. The new version of the software will help automate this process. "This release makes it easier to handle large amounts of data," he said.

To this end, the new version, the first major update in more than five years, is the first that offers the ability to capture engagement information in a database, which can then be searched and analysed with more ease.

Also, all of the software's functionality can now be accessed through APIs (application programming interfaces). "So if you wanted to deploy 40 copies across your enterprise for automated penetration testing, it would be very easy to do," Moore said.

The Metasploit Framework is a collection of and execution platform for known software exploits, code that harnesses or exploits security vulnerabilities in software programs for unintended purposes. The framework allows users to string together multiple exploits in order to gain illicit access to a system, replicating actions that would be taken by attackers. Rapid7 acquired Metasploit from Moore in 2009, who first created the framework.

In addition to wooing the enterprise IT security staff with new features, Rapid7 also kept the pentesters in mind with this release as well.

The new version features 36 new exploits, 27 new post-exploitation modules and 12 auxiliary modules, all of which have been added since the last update. The software package now hosts a total of 716 exploit modules, 361 auxiliary modules and 68 post-exploitation modules.

Nine of the new exploits are aimed at SCADA (supervisory control and data acquisition) systems, and others harness vulnerabilities in the Firefox and Internet Explorer browsers. Among the post-exploitation modules are capabilities for obtaining passwords from Microsoft Outlook, WSFTP, CoreFTP, SmartFTP, TotalCommander, BitCoin and other applications.

Rapid7 has also released updated versions of Metasploit Pro, a collection of reporting tools, and Metasploit Express, which provides entry level vulnerability verification and penetration testing capabilities.